4.5 Article

Simulation of equilibrium and transport in advanced FRCS

Journal

NUCLEAR FUSION
Volume 61, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1741-4326/ac1e5f

Keywords

field reversed configuration; equilibrium; transport; fast ions; open systems

Funding

  1. TAE Technologies, Inc.
  2. United States Department of Energy Office of Science (US DOE SC)
  3. Fusion Energy Sciences (FES)
  4. INFUSE program-a DOE SC FES private-public [2703]
  5. US DOE SC User Facility located at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  6. Argonne Leadership Computing Facility (ALCF) [DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  7. Innovative and Novel Computational Impact on Theory and Experiment (INCITE) program
  8. ASCR (Advanced Scientific Computing Research) Leadership Computing Challenge (ALCC) program
  9. US DOE National Nuclear Security Administration

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The article discusses the novel features of the advanced beam-driven FRC, highlighting the need to revisit key results in FRC theory. Experimental profiles of the C-2W experiment were reconstructed using a hybrid fluid/kinetic equilibrium model, showcasing the significant contribution of energetic ions to total plasma pressure. Various codes were utilized to simulate turbulent transport and heat transport in the SOL, explaining the remarkable plasma performance achieved in the experiment.
The advanced beam-driven FRC is a field reversed configuration (FRC) with the addition of neutral beam (NB) injection, electrode biasing, and magnetic expander divertors. The resulting configuration has novel features that make it necessary to revisit many key results in FRC theory. Three of these features include (i) a large energetic ion population, (ii) in-principle capability to adjust the electric field and rotation profiles, and (iii) a combination of magnetic and electrostatic confinement of electrons in the SOL. In some fueling scenarios the electron density profile may exhibit a significant peak outside of the separatrix. To explore these features a hybrid fluid/kinetic equilibrium model has been used to reconstruct typical experimental profiles of the C-2W experiment. Results indicate that the energetic ions provide at least 50% of the total plasma pressure. These equilibrium profiles have been used as initial conditions for global, cross-separatrix, turbulent transport simulations using the 3D electrostatic particle-in-cell code ANC. Electrostatic fluctuations were found to nonlinearly saturate at an amplitude which is an order magnitude lower than that observed previously. The tokamak turbulence code GTC code has also been extended to handle FRC physics in the new GTC-X version, which has been used to perform simulations of turbulent transport in the SOL relevant to electrode biasing. It is found that equilibrium E x B flow shear significantly decreases ion temperature gradient saturation amplitude and ion heat transport. Also in the SOL, a 1D2V continuum code has been developed and applied to parallel electron heat transport. Results show the formation of pre-sheath potential and reduction of parallel electron heat loss close to the ideal ambipolar limit, a result which has been validated by experimental diagnostics. These transport modifications caused by the three novel configuration features help to explain the remarkable plasma performance of the C-2W experiment.

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